Inner Feast of Favor
Ruth 2:13-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ruth 2 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Ruth asks to be favored and comforted. Boaz responds with nourishment and protection, illustrating gracious provision at work.
Neville's Inner Vision
Ruth 2:13-14 presents a scene of generous mercy as a turning of inner states. In Neville's language, Boaz is the outer sign of your inner I AM returning favor to you, and Ruth's words are your acknowledgement that you have been comforted by the vision you hold of yourself. The request to be found favorable is the soul's request to inhabit a mood of worthiness. When Boaz bids her to eat the bread and dip in vinegar, imagine the inner table where perception nourishes beliefs. The bread stands for the sustained supply that follows a settled assumption; the parched corn and the simple meal symbolize the sufficiency that arises when you rest in consciousness that already is fed. Ruth sitting with the reapers equals your aware self taking seat beside trusted faculties; her sufficiency and leaving of excess marks the instant when lack dissolves into the felt reality of abundance. Your task is to align with that inner invitation, to let gratitude and the sense of being cared for dissolve doubt and awaken radiant assurance.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and recall Ruth's invitation as your own. Assume you are already favored by your inner I AM, sit at the inner table, and feel sufficiency flow through you.
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